“Bill Flanagan has inherited the spirit of Kurt Vonnegut and written us a sharp, funny, charming novel about the enduring fantasy of living a life twice. What if we could live knowing what we know now? And what might happen to those around us? This is a wonderful comedy with a distinct social undertow." —Colum Mccann
“A strikingly original novel, immensely enjoyable to read.” —Salman Rushdie
"...there are chapters of lovely insight into the human condition, and wonderful depictions of longing and connection...a quick and enjoyable read, especially if you know Seventies rock."—Katie Stine, Historical Novel Society
“If HG Wells had imagined a jukebox rather than “Time Machine” he might still not have located the humour and the heart in this wonderful tale." –Elvis Costello, GRAMMY-winning singer/songwriter and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer
"As a devoted fan of Flanagan’s novels and essays on music, as well as his humor pieces and journalism, I was prepared to love Fifty in Reverse. What I was not prepared for, however, was my attachment to the characters, who have stayed with me like friends, and the seductive notion of time traveling to my own youth, which, on paper, sounds like an exercise in regret, but in Bill Flanagan’s funny and sharp narrative becomes an achingly beautiful revelation with full knowledge of the people you will meet by chance and love forever, the friends who will disappear, the music that will stay with you for your life, and the sacrifices your parents make, unnoticed in the necessary selfishness of childhood. I also did not expect to find myself in tears as I finished the last page, not from any nostalgia or sentiment, but from a piercing understanding of the trajectory of the lives of parent and child, and the temporality of even those things that feel the most real and permanent. He is a storyteller with a mastery of revealing moments and understated cultural and musical references, particularly satisfying to fans of seminal rock and roll and mid-20th Century history. I look forward to re-reading Fifty in Reverse and reveling again in that moment in time, and the fascinating idea of personal prescience that defines a character, enlightens, and heals." –Rosanne Cash, GRAMMY-Winning Singer/Songwriter and Bestselling Author
"There’s Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris. There are classics from Freaky Friday to Back to the Future to Groundhog Day. But when it comes to time travel, there’s always room for more. Bill Flanagan’s version, Fifty in Reverse, is an ode to the golden, if fraught, age of his youth—60s and 70s America—and follows a man well past middle age who wakes up one day to discover he is 15 again."—Tom Freston, AirMail